Dimming Friday Night Lights

Dimming Friday Night Lights

Dimming Friday Night Lights: Race, Gender, and the Ego of a Small-Town Hattie Miller HIST 3391/3392 History Thesis Seminar I & II Dr. Celia Naylor April 17, 2019 i “When you hold hands, it means you’re not just 11 individuals, but 11 grouped as ONE, with one goal in mind – to win the game. And when you reach over and grab a guy’s hand standing next to you, it’s inspirational because you know he’s out there doing exactly the same thing you’re doing – trying to win the game.” – Dal Watson Permian Football State Champion, 19841 The cover photograph is from Regina Walker McCally, The Secret of Mojo, (Fort Worth, TX: R.W. McCally, 1986), 214. 1 Regina Walker McCally, The Secret of Mojo, (Fort Worth, TX: R.W. McCally, 1986), 140. ii iii Acknowledgements To Nate Hearne, Doak Huddleston, Michael Miller, Sr., Martha Mitchell, Liz Faught, and Alan Jones for allowing me to record their stories and experiences. To Mike Adkins, for providing me with so many of my primary source documents. To Olivia Hartman, Anneliese Gallagher, and Madeline Sorg, for being the best thesis collaborators and commiserators I could have ever wanted. To Amelia Marcantonio-Fields, for her guidance in crafting my lovely maps. To everyone who read a draft of my thesis prior to submission: Anneliese Gallagher, John Sikes Johnson, Tassy Miller, Celia Naylor, Carson Smith, and Mickey Warshaw. To Olivia Hartman especially, for walking every terrifying step of the history thesis process with me and being a constant sounding board for ideas and anxieties related to theses and other life dramas. To John Sikes Johnson, for our weekly therapy sessions and for validating my rage towards the library hours set by Barnard College in the fall of 2018. To my father, Todd Vesely, for answering my endless questions about the specific details of Permian High School and connecting me with so many different sources for my research. To my mother, Tassy Miller, for sending me nightly videos of my puppy, Millie, at the precise time each evening that I was completely panicking about this thesis, for reading each chapter too many times to count, and for funding thesis snack purchases for all of the thesis gang. And most of all to Celia Naylor, for being the most understanding and nurturing thesis advisor in the world. I am eternally thankful for all that you did in getting me to this point. iv v Table of Contents INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................... 1 CHAPTER 1: “FEAST OR FAMINE”........................................................................................... 8 The Culture of Odessa, Texas CHAPTER 2: “A FORM OF EDUCATIONAL MALPRACTICE” ........................................... 23 The Fight to Desegregate Odessa, Texas CHAPTER 3: “WHERE’S THAT BOOK WRITER DUDE?” .................................................... 37 The Process and Impact of Publishing Friday Night Lights CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................................. 50 APPENDIX A ............................................................................................................................... 53 A map of the 254 counties in Texas with Ector and Midland counties highlighted APPENDIX B ............................................................................................................................... 54 The 1980 racial makeup of Ector County with an overlay of the high school boundaries prior to desegregation APPENDIX C ............................................................................................................................... 55 The 1990 racial makeup of Ector County with an overlay of the high school boundaries following desegregation BIBLIOGRAPHY ......................................................................................................................... 56 vi 1 Introduction “This must not be planet earth…this must be hell.” But it wasn’t. It was just Odessa.2 The twenty-minute drive from my hometown of Midland, Texas to the neighboring town of Odessa,3 where my parents spent most of their careers, is one that I have taken more times than I can count. Midland is situated just northeast of Odessa with a drive of less than twenty- five miles between the two no matter which highway you take. The towns are commonly referred to as a metropolitan area with estimates of a combined population of approximately 325,000.4 As an elementary school student, I would fall asleep to the sounds of Golden Oldies on 97.9 FM as my mom drove in the early hours of the morning to make it to morning practice with the junior high gymnastics program at Permian High School, where my parents coached the women’s and men’s teams. Sleeping was the better option compared to watching the scenery go by as the rolling, flat plains of West Texas are fairly ordinary. The Midland-Odessa area is halfway between El Paso, Texas in the westernmost corner of the state and the Dallas-Fort Worth area, which is located in north-central Texas. There is no greenery like that of the state’s eastern region, nor is there the rich, red dirt plateaus of the Big Bend region that are reminiscent of the Old West. The wide-open spaces to either side of Highway 191 are littered with pumpjacks, pumping in search of the lifeblood of the region that keeps so many businesses and families afloat and even thriving. When my mom and I took this route to school through 2005, pumpjacks and the occasional cow were the only points of interest between Midland and Odessa, but over 2 H.G. Bissinger, Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream (Boston: Da Capo Press, 2000), 30. 3 The location of Midland and Ector Counties, where the cities of Midland and Odessa respectively are located, is featured in Appendix A. 4 Trevor Hawes, "Midland-Odessa CSA Leads the Nation in Population Growth," Midland Reporter-Telegram, March 29, 2016, accessed April 7, 2019, https://www.mrt.com/business/article/Midland-Odessa-CSA-leads-the-nation-in-population-7405540.php. 2 the years, more and more businesses have been established along the highway, signifying the changing times and profitability of the oil industry. You arrive at Odessa via an overpass which offers you a birds-eye view of the town. You merge from Highway 191 onto 42nd Street and to the left you see the University of Texas of the Permian Basin, the only four-year university between the sister cities offering bachelor’s and master’s programs, which inexplicably features a nearly full-size replica of Stonehenge. To your right you pass the Walmart, the Target, the HEB (the world’s greatest grocery store chain available only in Texas and parts of Mexico), the only Chick-Fil-A in town, and the mall, which boasts a movie theatre, ice skating rink, indoor carousel, and headquarters for the local CBS 7 news team. Driving further down the road, you pass Memorial Park on the left, which erects a flag in honor of every life lost on September 11th each fall5 and where my parents used to spend their lunch breaks when they were still just dating. A few more blocks down the road, you take a left and finally arrive at Permian High School. My mother graduated from Odessa High School, the westside feeder school, and whenever she and her brother drove past Permian High while growing up my grandmother would urge them to hold their breath, so as not to breathe in that Permian air, something my mom could never manage as a little girl. It was perhaps one of my grandparents’ greatest disappointments when my mom accepted a job at Permian High School teaching special education and coaching girls’ gymnastics, something they silently and not-so-secretly begrudge to this day. Even though I graduated from Midland High School, I often joke that I have more of an emotional connection to Permian than to my own alma mater given how many hours of my childhood were spent in the gym during weekday practices, in the press box at Ratliff Stadium during Friday night games 5 Odessa Parks and Recreation, "An American Tribute," September 6, 2018, accessed April 7, 2019, https://www.odessatxparks.org/programs-events/special-events/american-tribute. 3 with my dad, and traveling with the gymnastics team on the weekends. There is an energy within Permian that is distinctly different from other high schools, something that I was acutely aware of even as a child and believe even more strongly after attending a different high school and feeling its absence. Few high schools can boast multiple books, a movie, and a TV show dedicated to the success and mystique of their football program. Friday Night Lights, by H.G. “Buzz” Bissinger, was published in 1990 after the author spent a year following the Permian Panthers’ 1988 football season. Bissinger arrived at Permian High assuring the administration that he wanted to write a book that celebrated the magic of Permian football, the winningest team of the Modern Day era of high school football.6 What resulted from Bissinger’s time, however, left a stain on Odessa and on Permian High School for years to come. The book spares no detail when it comes to the racial animosity of Odessa residents, dedicating numerous pages to the townspeople’s frequent use of the n-word with apparent abandon.7 He also situates senior James “Boobie” Miles, first-string fullback for the Panthers, as his tragic hero, utilizing him as another example of the town’s racism. Bissinger argues that Boobie was taken advantage of because of his athletic skills like so many other Black players on the team and that Boobie’s tragic downfall was the direct result of his participation in Permian football. However, Bissinger fails to capture the events that preceded the ’88 football season and properly contextualize the racial attitudes of the town. The events of Friday Night Lights take place only five years after Ector County Independent School District (ECISD) first desegregated after a drawn-out court battle, that took over a decade to resolve with the United States government, a crucial detail necessary to unpack fully before casting judgement on the town.

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